A lot of praise around the internets for the Dubs effort vs. The Lakers. I certainly didn’t expect anything but a Laker blowout, so…we should be happy?
Or not. The Warriors have near 50 win talent with a healthy squad, and these efforts should be the norm. The Lakers game was a shining example in how brutally bad lineup decisions are snatching defeat from the splash whiskers of victory. Of course I’m going to talk about Anthony Randolph, and I don’t care if people are tired of hearing it. Anthony Randolph, he of the ‘too many (gasp!) mistakes,’ played a shade under 19 minutes. Who can fault Nellie for that, the kid was clearly overmatched and killing the team? I mean, getting only 5 blocked shots, going 3/5, 5 assists, a whole turnover, making Lamar Odom pee his pants, we can’t have that, can we? I mean, getting only 5 blocked shots, going 3/5, 5 assists, a whole turnover, making Lamar Odom pee his pants…Hey, whenever you can sub out a guy on pace for a quadruple double for the unshaven corpse of Vladimir ‘rather be snowboarding’ Radmanovic…well, I’ll stop with the cloying sarcasm.
Here are the AR per 36 minute totals:
Age Tm Lg G GS MP FG FGA FG% 3P 3PA 3P%
20 GSW NBA 29 5 671 6.4 14.5 .439 0.1 0.3 .200
FT FTA FT% ORB DRB TRB AST STL BLK TOV PF PTS
5.3 6.5 .810 3.3 6.9 10.2 2.1 1.3 2.5 2.4 4.5 18.1
I’ll also add Randolph’s PER of 18.64 (second on the team). And don’t start with that ‘but he kills the team chemistry on defense!’ The numbers ain’t with ya on it. Sorry.
Here is Don Nelson’s record since the beginning of last season: 38-75. To those waiting for Nellie to coach us back from oblivion, do yourselves a favor and get super comfy.
I keep banging the same drum because the inexcusable occurs with alarming regularity. Warrior ‘drama’ gets all the pub, but Nellie’s unfettered mind-numbingly destructive lineup decisions is the real overarching trope of the post ‘We Believe’ era. Nellie’s addiction to ’small ball’ (or in this case, intentionally losing and passing it off as a strategy) continues unabated, and I have this stupid urge to make the holdouts accept reality: Please, for the sake of sanity, objective truth, and common wisdom, admit that he’s coaching the team into the ground. It’s painful enough to watch this happen to my favorite team, I don’t want to also feel like John Lithgow from ‘The Twilight Zone’ movie (there’s a gremlin doling out minutes to Kurz/Mikki/Vlad!).
It went from frustrating to comical back to frustrating and perhaps back to comical again. At least this losing strategy has it’s comedic benefits. One sideshow of the Nellie ball experience is hearing/reading Nellie apologists defend these decisions to the bitter end. As Nellie gets crazier, the apologists are forced into odd contortions. If Randolph balls it up in mingy minutes, we get something like, ‘Hey, Randolph grabbed two more rebounds after he was yanked and Nellie talked to him, yay Nellie!’ Father knows best, right? I’m sure he has his reasons, huh? I’d be more inclined to believe this if Nellie hadn’t pulled the same crap with virtually every young big who had the misfortune of suiting up for him. Look, I have nothing but love for all the Dubs fans out there, and I want the Nellie lovers to be correct…but I don’t think we’re at a point of arguing the subjective anymore. As in, one can argue that Wade is superior to Kobe Bryant, or vice versa. One cannot reasonably argue that Anthony Parker is superior to Kobe. And you can’t make solid, data-based arguments for keeping the 20 year old on the bench.
The paternalistic excuses for Nellie’s handling of Randolph have officially jumped the shark. Nellie’s not raising a child, he’s keeping one of his best players off the court in favor of NBA dregs. This isn’t 1972, we have endless empirical evidence to prove a coaching failure. Warriors Fans, it’s time to wake up and smell the scotch: Your coach is hurting the team.
This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at 8:47 pm and is filed under Miscellaneous. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.